Watson and the Shark, oil painting first created in 1778 by American artist John Singleton Copley. It was exhibited in 1778 at London’s Royal Academy of Arts and was instrumental in Copley’s being appointed to the academy. Copley painted a second version of the work later in 1778, and he created this smaller, more vertically composed version in 1782.
Watson and the Shark was inspired by a celebrated incident that took place in 1749 off the shore of Havana, Cuba. Brook Watson, a 14-year-old boy serving as a crew member on a trading ship, was attacked by a shark while he was swimming alone in the harbor. He suffered three attacks by the shark, and part of his leg was bitten off before his shipmates managed to rescue him, as shown in this dramatic, emotionally intense painting, Watson appears as an almost mythic creature. Here, he struggles in the water but his naked, white body appears to melt with the waves, as if he were already half part of the sea.
Watson survived the ordeal and went on to become a highly successful merchant and politician in London, where he served a term as mayor from 1796 to 1797. Watson himself is believed to have commissioned the painting from Copley. Though the painting exhibits great immediacy, the poses in the painting reflect a variety of precedents in art history. Copley had never seen Havana, and he likely researched the harbor’s appearance. Likewise, he had no knowledge of sharks, and his shark is the least realistic part of the painting.
Recent critical analysis has been devoted to the sociohistorical context for the Black sailor standing in the center of the boat. Although Copley probably had little political reason for including this character, and it was not uncommon at this time for Black freemen to work on the seas, the figure is one of the earliest examples of an African American as a heroic figure in Western art. The work’s themes of courage, teamwork, perseverance, and self-made success are typical ideals that the colonialist Copley became famous for expressing in his paintings.